CW2:1592

From Environmental Technology

(Difference between revisions)
('''Chesapeake Bay Ecosystem''')
('''Chesapeake Bay Ecosystem''')
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d.  Forests protect water quality, create habitat for fish and wildlife, improve air quality, encourage recreation, and contribute to the economy.
d.  Forests protect water quality, create habitat for fish and wildlife, improve air quality, encourage recreation, and contribute to the economy.
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e. '''Autotrophs''' = self-feeders; primary food producers; plants
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e. '''Autotrophs''' = producers; self-feeders; primary food producers; plants and algae
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'''Heterotrophs''' = other-feeders; animals
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'''Heterotrophs''' = consumers; other-feeders; animals or organisms that eat plants
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Saprotrophs = decomposers; digest the bodies of both plants and animals and the waste products of both.
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f.

Revision as of 21:36, 10 February 2006

Chesapeake Bay Ecosystem

a. Wetlands are the transitional link between the water and the land. The two groups of wetlands are Estuarine and Palustrine. Wetlands are also characterized by their vegetation as either emergent, shrub, or forested. Some types of wetlands include marshes, swamps, and bogs.

b. Wetlands protect and improve water quality, help control erosion and flooding, and provide habitat for terrestrial and aquatic life.

c. The percentage loss of Forest in the Bay area is 35%. There are more than 2,700 plant species and more than 50 major tree species in the Bay area.

d. Forests protect water quality, create habitat for fish and wildlife, improve air quality, encourage recreation, and contribute to the economy.

e. Autotrophs = producers; self-feeders; primary food producers; plants and algae Heterotrophs = consumers; other-feeders; animals or organisms that eat plants Saprotrophs = decomposers; digest the bodies of both plants and animals and the waste products of both.

f.

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